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Embargoed January 16, 2023, 00:01 London<\/strong> \u2014 Companies like TUI Musement, GetYourGuide, Trip.com, AttractionTickets.com and Jet2holidays are STILL<\/em>, exploiting wildlife for profit despite 84%1<\/sup> of UK citizens who believe that tour operators should not sell activities that cause wild animals suffering, according to a report by World Animal Protection<\/a>.<\/p>\n Elephant riding, selfies with tiger cubs and swimming with dolphins were some of the cruel wildlife activities on offer by these travel brands, according to the Real Responsible<\/em> Traveller<\/a> report. The study reviewed 9 leading travel companies on their commitment to animal welfare and wildlife friendly tourism with the aim to help holiday makers plan a wildlife friendly holiday. <\/p>\n Thousands of wild animals every year are forced to perform for tourist entertainment or be subjects for tourist \u201cexperiences\u201d that are incredibly unnatural and stressful for them. For example, elephants in entertainment are captured in the wild or born into captivity and taken from their mothers at\u202fan early age. They are then subjected to violent training regimes causing huge physical and psychological harm. <\/p>\n Dolphins used for entertainment are mostly bred in captivity, (although some are still captured from the wild) and kept in barren tanks a tiny fraction of their natural home range which creates huge distress for these wonderful animals. <\/p>\n Travelling responsibly means never including captive wildlife entertainment or experiences on your itinerary and refusing to book your holiday with travel companies which may claim to offer responsible, sustainable travel, while continuing to profit from wild animal exploitation. The report also shows the travel companies who have made significant, positive steps for wildlife over recent years including Airbnb, and Booking.com. Expedia has improved in some areas, having stopped selling captive dolphin entertainment in 2021. \u202f <\/p>\n Katheryn Wise, World Animal Protection, Wildlife Campaign Manager, said<\/strong>: \u201cHoliday makers have made it clear; they don\u2019t want tour operators selling animal suffering, but the reality is, suffering is still being sold under the guise of entertainment. Who you book your holiday with matters. TUI Musement, Jet2holidays, GetYourGuide Trip.com and Attraction Tickets.com are STILL exploiting captive wild animals. <\/p>\n \u201cWorld Animal Protection is urging responsible travellers to join us in challenging these companies to do better for animals. Real responsible travellers have the power to act and create lasting change for wild animals by refusing to support companies that still<\/em> treat wild animals as commodities who they can exploit for profit. <\/p>\n \u201cFor more information on how you can make a difference visit our Real Responsible Travel Page at www.worldanimalprotection.org.uk\/real-responsible-traveller<\/a>.<\/p>\n \u201cWe are also urging the UK government to take action by passing the Animals (Low Welfare Activities Abroad) Bill, which sees its second parliamentary reading take place on February 3rd. This important bill intends to stop the sale and advertising of activities abroad which involve low standards of welfare for animals.\u201d <\/p>\n The Real Responsible<\/em> Travelle<\/em>r <\/a> report builds on World Animal Protection\u2019s 2020 Tracking the Travel Industry<\/em><\/a> report, which assessed Airbnb, AttractionTickets.com, Booking.com, DER Touristik, Expedia, Flight Centre, GetYourGuide, Klook,\u202f The Travel Corporation, Viator, Trip.com and TUI Musement.\u202f\u202f \u202f <\/p>\n World Animal Protection commissioned the University of Surrey who independently analysed the public commitments travel companies have, and haven\u2019t, made.\u202f\u202f \u202f <\/p>\n Companies were scored across four key areas:\u202f\u202f\u202f \u202f <\/p>\n World Animal Protection then checked to see if they offered any of the five \u201canimal attractions\u201d:\u202f\u202f \u202f <\/p>\n For more information about industry best practices and how holidaymakers can make their concerns known to the travel companies click here<\/a>.<\/p>\n Ends <\/p>\n References<\/strong> <\/p>\n\n
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